Author Archives: wciecon

Resource Revenue Retention: New Twists on an Old Idea?

In a post on iPolitics, author and journalist Madelaine Drohan discusses the move by the PQ government in Quebec to embrace the Generations Fund – a sovereign wealth fund created by the Liberal government of Jean Charest in 2006.  The original plan was to invest water power and mining royalties into a fund whose income […]

A post for Steve Keen

I hesitated a lot before writing this. How to write it? Should I write it at all? Then I thought: "What would Arnold do?". I will probably fail, but I'm going to try anyway.

$600b debt x (2% inflation + 2.5% real growth) = $27b

Just a little bit of simple debt and deficit arithmetic. Let's adjust the deficit for long run inflation and long run real growth. That cuts the deficit by around $27 billion.

Four MC curves and two PPFs

Just another "Teaching" post. Because it's needed. (Though I have never taught micro beyond first year.) Marginal Cost means the change in Total Cost per extra unit of output. MC=dTC/dQ. (Not to be confused with Average Cost, which is the level of Total Cost divided by the level of output. AC=TC/Q.) Do MC curves slope […]

Carney’s Departure: The Bigger Picture

Well, it has been an exciting couple of days in Canada on the policy side given the juxtaposition of the following news: 1) the federal by-election results suggest a more competitive political environment for the federal Conservatives in the stronghold of Alberta 2) the world-class City of Toronto is deposing its Mayor over a conflict […]

Mark Carney to the Bank of England

You might think I have a lot to say about this. (A top UK newspaper just emailed asking me to write something.) I don't. I have very little to say. And what I do have to say is fairly obvious. I think Britain needs him more than Canada does, because the British economy is in […]

Elasticity, slope, scale, and collusion

Every year I teach "elasticity". And every year the students ask "Why not talk about "slope" instead?". They are familiar with "slope", but "elasticity" is a new concept. Why do we teach a new concept, if an old familiar concept would do just as well? [For non-economists: the slope of a demand curve is the […]

Questioning grades: a very short survey

If you've ever been a student or a teacher, please answer this seven question survey: Take part in our online survey I explain what the survey is about below the fold.

Why Harper is Not Going to Halifax

The provincial premiers are meeting on the economy in Halifax today and tomorrow and Prime Minister Harper will not be joining them.  Several of them have offered up expressions of surprise and disappointment and have lamented the absence of the Prime Minister. The operatic drama that often characterizes exchanges at federal-provincial meetings has been absent […]

The students’ dilemma

Imagine a world where education is of no intrinsic value, and serves only as a signal of an unobservable character trait called "ability." Performance (which can be observed) is determined by both ability and effort. Effort is costly. Some students have a high level of ability, and some have a low level of ability. A professor's […]